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Packaging
Light comes packed in a cardboard box with a nice satin-like coating on the exterior. The light and all accessories are held in place by a plastic clamshell.

Contents
1x 4Sevens Quark AA² Regular
1x Nylon holster with velcro closure
1x Lanyard
1x Flexible rubber hand grip attachment
1x Instruction sheet
2x Spare rubber o-rings
2x Duracell AA batteries

Construction

The Quark series of flashlights are the initial offering by relatively new manufacturer 4Sevens. The current line of Quarks are available in either regular or tactical versions. The light reviewed here is the Quark AA² Regular. Right up the front is a smooth bezel. An sapphire-coated impact-resistant glass lens sits slightly recessed within the bezel. Behind the lens is a medium-textured which has a very well-polished surface finish with no flaws or blemished to be found. The LED sits perfectly aligned at the bottom of the reflector cup. Looking in from the rear, the battery contact points on the PCB can be seen. There is a physical reverse polarity protection design implemented by means of two raised crescent-shaped surfaces. The exterior of the head has a plain cylindrical shape with no unnecessary aesthetic machining. A large area of its surface is covered by a band of diamond-textured knurling which provides good grip and allows for easy twists of the head.

Keeping with the same clean cylindrical design concept, the battery tube is almost totally covered in knurling on its exterior apart from three flat faces. The entire light is coated in black Type 3 anodizing which is consistent throughout. There is also a removable clip which comes pre-attached to the battery tube. It's held securely in place by a retaining ring which threads into the battery tube from the rear, and the clip also sits in a small notch which prevents it from sliding around. The threads on either end of the battery tube are well cut and mate nicely with those on the head and tail cap. The Quarks are advertised as having square-cut threads, though they're rather fine and you probably won't notice the difference to regular threads, unlike those on the recent JETBeam's for example. There are also rubber o-rings placed behind the threads for water resistance. The tail cap houses a reverse push button switch in the case of the regular version of the Quark AA². The switching mechanism has average tension and travel. It provides a positive tactile feedback when fully engaged. The rubber switch cap sits recessed within the tail cap with this regular version, so tail standing is possible. There are holes machined into the tail cap for lanyard attachments as well. The rubber hand grip attachment allows the light to be held while allowing your fingers to be free for use.

If you're unfamiliar with any of the terms used in this review, click here for explanations on common flashlight related vocabulary.


Output

The Quark AA² Regular provides 5 modes with the head loosened and 2 modes with it tightened. Cycling through the output modes is done by half-pressing the switch and is similar to those of some Fenix flashlights.

Loosened head:
Moonlight> Low > Medium > High > S.O.S.

Tightened head:
Maximum > Strobe

The beam profile has a medium sized hot spot tapering smoothly towards the corona. Between the Low to High output levels, the beam has an almost perfectly white tint when compared to sunlight, but there is a slight tint shift towards the cool side when running the light on maximum output level. The Quark AA² is advertised to output a maximum of 170 lumens, tests done with this review sample produced a peak of 196 lumens. The electronics does an excellent job at regulating output while also providing good runtimes on most levels, although runtimes on the Maximum level seems to be comparatively short.


Conclusion

The Good - Clean body design. Well-designed pocket clip. Well regulated output performance.

The Bad - Comparatively short runtime on Maximum output level.

The Relative - Beam has a neutral white tint, accept on Max level which shifts slightly to a cooler tint. Uses a reverse push button. Is able to tail stand.


Gallery (in order of assembly)

Head (front view).

Head (side view).

Head (rear view).

Battery tube (front view).

Battery tube (side view).

Battery tube (rear view).

Tail cap (front view).

Tail cap (side view).

Tail cap (rear view).


4Sevens Quark AA² Regular
November 29, 2009
Overall
7.8

Construction
    8.0
Output
    8.0
Value
    7.5

Availability
4Sevens.com
Beam Profile
Medium Spot
Coating
Type 3 Anodizing
Cost
$50.15
Dimensions
146mm long
21mm at widest Ø
Lens
Impact Resistant AR and Sapphire Coated Glass
Light Source
Cree XP-E
Output
Maximum 196 Lumens
High 76 Lumens
Medium 16 Lumens
Low 3 Lumens
Moonlight <1 Lumens
Maximum Spot 4940 Lux
Maximum Spill 80 Lux
High Spot 1930 Lux
High Spill 31 Lux
Medium Spot 414 Lux
Medium Spill 7 Lux
Low Spot 80 Lux
Low Spill 1 Lux
Moonlight Spot 8 Lux
Moonlight Spill <1 Lux
Power
2x AA
Reflector
Textured Aluminum
Runtime
2x AA 2000mAh Eneloop
Maximum 00:56 to 50%
High 05:17 to 50%
Medium 28:28 to 50%
Low ~5 days
Moonlight ~30 days
Switch
Reverse Push button
Weight
60.6g
113.2g with 2x Eneloop AA